Thursday, January 24, 2008
What the rate cut means for home loans
January to June 2001: Federal Rate Cut 2.25% Home Loan Rate Rose 0.10%
October to December 2001: Federal Rate Cut 0.75% Home Loan Rate Rose 0.45%
May to August 2003: Federal Rate Cut 0.25% Home Loan Rate Rose 0.78%
If you are waiting for long-term mortgage rates to fall further from here, don’t count on it. Your best chance to lock in the lowest mortgage rates since 2005 is now. Getting your application in process will allow you to capture a rate near all time lows.
Source: Regina Elmers, Coldwell Banker Home Loans
Monday, January 21, 2008
Homebuilders get Coldwell Banker's sales assist
http://columbus.bizjournals.com/columbus/stories/2007/12/24/story6.html?page=1
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Tax time
1. At purchase: In many cases the points and origination fees on your loan are tax deductible. Look at lines 801 and 802 on your settlement statement to see how much you paid.
2. Mortgage interest: You can deduct the interest paid on your mortgage and home equity loans. In the beginning of the loan, this is a large chunk of the monthly payment and you could be saving almost a third of the interest expense through deductions. Also, if you are paying private mortgage insurance and purchased or will purchase your home between January 1, 2007 and December 31, 2010, the private mortgage insurance is tax deductible too. Don't forget about your property taxes. You can get deductions for the property taxes in the year it is paid, not the year you put it in your escrow account.
3. At sale: If you owned and occupied your home as your principle residence for 2 of the last 5 years you can earn up to $500,000 on the sale for married couples or $250,000 for singles and pay no federal income tax at all. So that means you can buy a fixer-upper, work on it for nights and weekends for two years (while living in it) then sell it for a nice profit, tax free!
http://new.realtor.com/Basics/Buy/ClosePossess/TaxBenefits.asp?poe=realtor
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/itax/news/taxguide/sweet-home1.asp?caret=4b
Monday, January 14, 2008
Falling even more!
Interest rates are falling!
Sunday, January 6, 2008
3 Signs of Predatory Lending
Subprime lending was started to give credit to buyers who otherwise would not be able to qualify for a loan. Although this sounds good, predatory lenders often charge such high interest rates and fees that it is not in the best interest of these buyers. Here are three signs of a predatory lender:
1. Choose easy targets: Predatory lenders tend to go after elderly people, immigrants, minorities, and individuals with low credit scores because they believe that these groups may be less educated about lending practices.
2. Charge unnecessary fees: Add unnecessary fees or services, like overpriced insurance.
3. Give misleading or no information: The terms of the loan may seem too good to be true. They may offer very low prices in the beginning then change the terms at the last minute.
Always make sure that when you are looking for a loan compare several lenders and ask your real estate agent for advice before choosing a lender. Usually you will find that the legitimate lenders offer very similar terms and rates. If it seems too good to be true, it probably is!
http://www.realtor.org/rmomag.NSF/pages/Excerpt200801?OpenDocument